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Are His 15 Minutes Up Yet?
Jim Cramer, Overexposed
by Melanie Warner
Back in May 1997, Jim Cramer seemed to be everywhere. When FORTUNE profiled the curly-haired 43-year-old hedge-fund manager, he was appearing regularly on CNBC's Squawk Box, writing for New York and Worth magazines (he was negotiating with many others, including this one), and co-founding TheStreet.com, a new online financial magazine. This guy, we observed, was ubiquitous. Little did we know he was just warming up.
By the end of last year, His Downess was popping up on TV more than Jerry Springer--CNN, The Charlie Rose Show, Good Morning America, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., you name it. Cramer probably would have appeared on Sesame Street if they'd asked. The Street.com became just one of the many places you could read his columns about the stock market. He assumed new writing gigs for Time and GQ, and other publications reprinted part of his twice-daily rantings, as did Yahoo and AOL. He even posed as a "financial guru" in ads for Rockport shoes. If you could get through 24 hours without a Cramer sighting, you were lucky. His workday, he says, regularly stretched from 4:30 a.m. till 11 p.m.
Then one night, it hit him. After a disastrous appearance in February on ABC's sardonic celebrity talkfest Politically Incorrect, when host Bill Maher, he says, called him "stupid" and "an idiot," Cramer returned home exhausted. His wife chided him, "If you ever do anything like that again ..." Cramer had realized what was obvious to everyone else: He was overextended and overexposed. But Cramer says that every time he mugged for the camera, it was for The Street.com, not to promote himself. Each appearance he made resulted in sizable increases in the number of visits to the site and ultimately helped ramp it up to its current 18,400 paying subscribers. Cramer, who has personally sunk $5.5 million into the venture, confesses, "I became in my own eyes a self-promoter, and I was very uncomfortable with that."
Cramer reports that he has since been scaling back, turning down 70% of the flood of requests he gets for TV appearances, giving up his Worth contract, and pruning his regular stint on Good Morning America from weekly to biweekly. He even took a rare two-week vacation recently with his family in Amagansett, Long Island, during which he claims to actually have done no work. "My life has returned to some semblance of normalcy. I'm usually home by six and don't work weekends anymore," says Cramer.
It may not seem very scaled back to the rest of us. He's planning a new weekly The Street.com talk show on CNBC--he calls it "a Wall Street Week for this age." A recent issue of Newsweek crowned him one of the "top buzzmakers of the moment," whatever that means. And when Cramer spoke with this writer about his new, allegedly low-impact life, he'd written five columns for TheStreet.com in 48 hours, appeared on Good Morning America, and was about to dash over to CNN's MoneyLine to talk to host Lou Dobbs about accounting shenanigans at Cendant. Oh, and he'd spent the whole day trading stocks and options. "Sell 25 Intel with an 80 low," he bellowed at one of his traders.
Fundamentally, Cramer may just not be wired for normality. First of all, there's the sleep thing. Then, he says that he can't stop thinking about the market and that he has a paranormal, photographic memory for stock prices. Plus, he's obsessive about answering the hundreds of E-mails he gets each day from fans. How does he manage? It helps, he says, that he types 165 words a minute. Which is pretty paranormal itself. The current Guinness world record for typing on a PC? 158. |